Showing posts with label Pie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pie. Show all posts

6/15/15

Recipe: Strawberry Icebox Pie

If ramps are the first taste of spring, then strawberries are most certainly the first taste of summer. Each year as we take our first bite of our first strawberry, a sense of joyous relief falls over us and we know that summer is truly here. But like all good things in life, strawberry season goes by in a flash, and it's up to us to make the most of it.

We wanted to celebrate this limited-time-only, ruby-red harvest this week, but when we sat down to work out the recipe, we had no idea where to start. There are just so many delicious, delectable, delightful ways to eat strawberries! Our favorite, of course, is to eat 'em as you pick 'em - but that's not much of a recipe. Other dishes on the list? Strawberry rhubarb pie, strawberry jam, strawberries and cream, strawberries and ice cream, strawberry pancakes, strawberry shortcake... you can imagine it's a very long list.

Anyway, rather than pick just one, we decided to pile as many strawberry preparations as we could into one pie plate, and here's where we landed – Strawberry Icebox Pie. There's something for everyone, and a little bit of everything for us – graham cracker crust, jam, mousse, cream and fresh berries. It looks like a lot of work, but it's not – we promise! And it's worth it. So, so worth it! 

 
Strawberry Icebox Pie
Crust:
+ 15 graham crackers (about 1 ½ cups when crushed)
+ ¾ stick butter, melted
+ 1/3 cup sugar
+ 1 tsp salt

Jam Layer:
+ 1 lb. strawberries, hulled
+ 1⁄3 cup sugar
+ 1 1/2 tablespoons cornstarch

Mousse Layer: 
+ 1 lb. strawberries, hulled
+ 1⁄2 cup sugar
+ 1⁄2 tbsp. lemon juice
+ 1⁄2 tsp. salt
+ 3 eggs, separated into yolks and whites
+ 1 cup heavy cream
+ 1 1⁄2 tsp. vanilla extract

Whipped Cream:
+ 1 cup heavy cream
+ 2 tbsp sugar

Directions:

To make the crust:
1. Preheat oven to 350°.
2. Crush the graham crackers. A food processor is the easiest way, but you can also put the crackers in a heavy zip-lock bag, wrap the bag in a dishtowel, and whack away at it with a rolling pin.
3. Mix all crust ingredients until well-combined. Dump into a buttered 9-inch pie pan or spring-form pan and press firmly onto the bottom and up the sides. (If using a spring form pan, lay parchment paper in the bottom and then butter.)
4. Bake for 10 minutes. Set pan on wire rack to cool.

To make the jam layer:
1. Chop about half of the strawberries into 1/2-inch pieces. Set aside.
2. Put remaining strawberries in a medium saucepan and crush them using a fork. Add sugar and cornstarch to the pan and cook over medium-low heat until mixture comes to a boil.
3. Remove from heat and stir in remaining chopped strawberries. Cool completely.
4. Spread cooled jam in the bottom of the cooled crust. If your jam seems very watery, use a slotted spoon and transfer only the chunky parts. Refrigerate the whole thing – crust and jam - or put in the freezer until cool.

To make the mousse layer:
1. Puree strawberries in a blender or food processor until smooth and transfer to a large saucepan. Add sugar, lemon juice, salt, and egg yolks, then whisk until smooth. Put the saucepan over medium heat and bring to a simmer.
2. Cook, whisking occasionally, for about 15 minutes, or until the mixture has thickened a little. Remove from heat, allow to cool for 10 minutes, then put in the refrigerator until cold – about 30 minutes.
3. Whisk egg whites in a bowl until stiff peaks form and add to cooled strawberry mixture. Fold gently until combined then set aside.
4. Whisk cream and vanilla in a clean bowl until stiff peaks form, add to strawberry mixture. Fold until combined then gently pour into pan, layering on top of cooled jam.
5. Refrigerate the pie or put in the freezer until the mousse sets a bit.

To make the whipped cream:
1. Mix cream and sugar in a bowl. Whip until firm peaks form. Spread over mouse layer. Put in the freezer for a few hours or overnight. One hour before serving, take the cake out of freezer if you're using a spring form pan, release it now) and put in the fridge to thaw slowly. Before serving, top with strawberries.

Note: This recipe originally appeared on RuralIntelligence.com on June 15, 2015. It's been back-dated here on our blog so that it falls, seasonally, in the right place.

8/8/12

Recipe: Tomato Pie

We’ve been spread pretty thin lately, slowly settling into our new lives here in New Marlborough, so you may have noticed that we’ve been neglecting the blog a little bit. Though our next post is always in the back of our minds it has been a struggle - between a new kitchen and new schedules - to get into a good cooking, picture taking and writing routine. 

But that doesn’t mean we haven’t been busy working on The Butcher and The Baker. On his days off from The Meat Market, Jake has been scouting out new farms to profile (look out for our next Field Trip to Whippoorwill Farm!) and organizing our overflowing kitchen. All the while Silka has been busy in the garden, meeting with lots of people in the local food community and getting us published! It’s been so fun and really exciting... but now here we are, running in circles and getting a little tired of pasta for breakfast, lunch and dinner. 


Now don’t get us wrong, a great pasta with some cheese and seasonal veggies is the best. But we have started to search for, if not new veg, (because really, how can you get sick of summer produce) a new carb-based canvas. Inspired by the one thing we’re never too busy to make - PIE! - Silka decided to skip the spaghetti and make a simple and savory tart with our CSA harvest and veggies from Jake’s father’s garden. 

While we, along with most of the country, have been experiencing a terrible crop-testing drought, Jake’s father's garden is somehow bursting with bright veggies. Everywhere you look there are tons of juicy, golden orbs hanging just waiting to be plucked. Warm off the vine, they are bursting with a bright, sweet flavor. After shoveling a few freshly-picked handfuls into our mouths, we dumped as many as we could into a basket and brought them home where Silka had a roughly rolled-out crust waiting. Piled high with the tomatoes, some onion and thyme, we folded over the edges and threw it into the oven. 



Classic Pie Dough
(The recipe below is for one 8” pie crust. In the case of a rustic tart, we like to make 1.5 times this recipe so there is plenty of dough create a sturdy edge.)

1 cup flour
1 pinch salt
1 stick cold butter, cut into pieces
½ bar of cold cream cheese, cut into pieces (4 oz)

1. Combine dry ingredients into a food processor and pulse until mixed.
2. Add butter and cream cheese and pulse until mixture starts to form a ball, usually 8 - 10 pulses.
3. Turn out onto a floured surface and pat into a 2 inch-thick disc. Wrap in saran wrap and chill for at least 1 hour.


Tomato Pie

1.5 pints of cherry tomatoes, large ones cut in half
½ onion, roughly chopped

½ stick of butter (4 tbsp)1 tbsp fresh thyme
½ tsp sugar
salt and pepper to taste
 

Optional: 
3/4 cup grated cheese - Gruyere or goat would work perfectly!

1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
2. On a floured surface, roll out dough to ⅛ in thick and about 12 inches around. Don’t worry about a perfect circle here, rustic shapes work just fine. Place back into the refrigerator.
3. Place onions, with 2 tablespoons of butter, in a large pan on medium heat. Let caramelize, stirring occasionally for 15 minutes.
4. Add a salt and pepper to taste, sugar and thyme, cooking for another 5 minutes.
5. Add remaining 2 tablespoons of butter into the pan and let melt. Add tomatoes and fold into butter to coat. Let cook for an additional 3 minutes, salt and pepper some more, and remove from heat.
6. After the tomato and onion mixture has cooled (10 minutes or so), remove dough from fridge and place on a baking sheet with edges. Pour filling into the center of the dough and gently fold over edges to hold vegetables in.
7. Bake for 40 minutes or until crust is golden and tomatoes start to burst. Sprinkle cheese on top and broil until melted and bubbling. Remove from oven and let sit 10 minutes before serving.

11/4/11

Recipe: Crumble-Top Apple Pie

As a food-obsessed couple, we're somehow lucky enough to agree on most preferences. Local and seasonal? Check. Earthy, gamy foods? Check. Lots of Brussels Sprouts and Kale? Check. Bacon? Check! Ok, that's an easy one. But the one thing we can't agree on? Pie versus crumble. Silka likes the crunchy chunks of a crumble's topping while Jake much prefers the flaky crust of a traditional pie.

But now that it's fall, we're picking up a half dozen apples every time we go to the market. And when we get home, we're left with the same question: How are we going to get through all of these apples before we go to the market and thoughtlessly pick up another half dozen just because they are there and beautiful and we can't help it? Silka generally tries to avoid the pie/crumble conflict by making apple cakes, bread and sauces. But this week she really wanted a crumble, so we decided to compromise with an crumble-topped apple pie. Nick Malgieri's flaky pastry crust, made with wheaty Cayuga flour and rich Ronnybrook butter, was the perfect compliment to a mix of Migliorelli Jonagold and Macoun apples. Topped with an oatmeal and molasses crumble and some vanilla ice cream, it was something we could both agree on.


Flaky Pie Crust
From Nick Malgieri's Bake!
 
+ 1 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
+ 1/4 teaspoon salt
+ 1/8 teaspoon baking powder
+ 8 tablespoons (1 stick) cold unsalted butter
+ 2 to 3 tablespoons cold water
 
1. To mix the dough by hand, combine flour, salt and baking powder in a medium sized mixing bowl and stir well to mix. Cut butter into 1-tablespoon pieces and add to dry ingredients. Toss once or twice to coat pieces of butter. Then using your hands or a pastry blender, break the butter into tiny pieces and pinch and squeeze it into the dry ingredients. Keep the mixture uniform by occasionally reaching down to the bottom of the bowl and mixing all the ingredients evenly together. Continue rubbing the butter into the dry ingredients until the mixture resembles a coarseground cornmeal and no large pieces of butter remain visible. 
2. Sprinkle the minimum amount of water over the butter and flour mixture and stir gently with a fork the dough should begin holding together. If the mixture still appears dry and crumbly, add the remaining water, 1 teaspoon at a time for the smaller quantity of dough, a tablespoon at a time for the larger quantity, until the dough holds together easily.
3. To mix the dough in the food processor, combine flour, salt and baking powder in work bowl fitted with metal blade. Pulse 3 times at 1-second intervals to mix. Cut butter into 1-tablespoon pieces and add to work bowl. Process, pulsing repeatedly at 1-second intervals, until the mixture is fine and powdery, resembles a coarse-ground cornmeal and no large pieces of butter remain visible. About 15 pulses in all.
4. Scatter the minimum amount of water on the butter and flour mixture and pulse 5 or 6 times. The dough should begin holding together. If the mixture still appears dry and crumbly, add the remaining water, 1 teaspoon at a time.
5. Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface and form it into a disk. Sandwich the disk of dough between two pieces of plastic wrap and press it into a 6-inch circle. Refrigerate the dough until firm, or until you are ready to use it, at least 1 hour. 


Crumble Topping 
Adapted from this recipe

+ 1/2 cup golden brown sugar - we used just under 1/2 cup granulated sugar and 1 tablespoon of molasses
+ 1/2 cup flour
+ 1/2 cup old-fashioned oats
+ 1 1/2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
+ 1/4 teaspoon salt
+ 6 tablespoons (3/4 stick) chilled unsalted butter, diced

1. Mix oats, cinnamon, salt, golden brown sugar and flour in medium bowl. Add chilled butter and rub in with fingertips until moist clumps form.


Crumble-Top Apple Pie

+ Completed crust dough
+ Completed crumble
Filling: 
+ 6 cups thinly sliced, peeled apples (6 medium) - we like to use a mix of Jonagold and Macoun
+ 3/4 cup sugar
+ 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
+ 3/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
+ 1/4 teaspoon salt
+ 1 tablespoon lemon juice - we used Apple Cider Vinegar

1. Heat oven to 425°F. Place 1 pie crust in ungreased 9-inch glass pie plate. Press firmly against side and bottom. Fold in top edge to create a small ridge. 
2. In large bowl, gently mix filling ingredients; spoon into crust-lined pie plate. Top with crumble. 
3. Bake for 45 minutes or until apples are tender and crumble is golden brown.
4. Cool on cooling rack at least 2 hours before serving. (We never stick to that rule.)

10/2/11

Sunday Dinner: Dine In Irene

Before we started this blog, or even talked about starting this blog, we daydreamed of hosting a "supper club." While we hadn't really worked out the details, we knew it would be a great opportunity to entertain more without going broke and good practice presuming we ever open a small restaurant. We talked endlessly about possible ways to create a unique experience for our guests- maybe integrating Jake's art work or collaborating with our friend Kelly, the BLager- but we were still in the brainstorming stages.

When we read about Dine I
n Irene, organized by GrowNYC and Bloggers without Borders, we knew we'd found our excuse to really dive in and try it out. The event's brief represented everything behind our blog and the way we live our lives; advocating for local food and economies, communities and the stories that support them. By shopping almost exclusively at the Green Market, we were already doing our small part in helping a handful of vendors who were hurt by the flooding. But what about those farms who were so devastated that they had nothing left to sell? We wanted to do something bigger and this was a great opportunity. 


On Monday we quickly put together an approximate menu, a description of the cause, and the details of the evening. After setting the limit at 12, we sent the invite out to about 30 people and within two hours we had said yes to 16 people with more requests coming in. Suddenly it hit us- we had never cooked dinner for 18 people. Where would people sit? How would we cook that much food in our small, hot kitchen? Did we even have enough plates? Would everyone get along or keep to themselves in awkward social circles around the apartment?

Well, we're pleased to announce that we pulled it off! We cooked and shopped for two days, shifting the menu as the ingredients did or did not show up at the market. We shared the kitchen without killing one another and nothing was burnt! The food was great, everyone got along perfectly, and we raised over $400.



None, and we mean none, of this could have happened without the help our of incredibly supportive group of friends- both those who were there and those who couldn't make it. We were so proud to gather and raise a glass in gratitude for the many dedicated farmers who make meals like this possible.

So now that we're seasoned professionals (ha!), we'll be hosting dinners like this a lot more often. If you're interested in joining our mailing list for our events, please send us an email at cutandbake@gmail.com
with the subject "mailing list." We can't wait to see you here!



MENU

MAIN COURSE
Pork Butt Braised in Hard Cider
Pork Butt- Fleisher’s Meats
Pork Shoulder- Flying Pigs Farm
Rustica Hard Cider- Eve’s Cidery
Mustard- A. Bauer’s Mustard (Eataly)
Leeks and Parsnips- Migliorelli Farm

Slaw
Nappa Cabbage and Jalapeno- Queen’s Farm
Honey- Berkshire Berries
Carrots- Migliorelli Farm
Apple Cider Vinegar- Race Farm

Roasted Squash
Delectica and Butter Cup Squashes- Sycamore Farm
Butternut Squashes, Sage, Rosemary and Garlic- Keith’s Farm
Maple Syrup- Jake’s Back Yard

Sauteed Kale with Bacon
Kale- Migliorelli Farm
Bacon- Flying Pig Farm
Sunflower Oil- Cayuga Pure Organics

Buttermilk Biscuits
Buttermilk- Tonje’s Family Dairy
Butter- Ronnybrook Dairy
All-Purpose Flour- Cayuga Pure Organics

DESSERT
Apple Pie
Mutsu and Jonathan Apples- Locust Grove Farms
Cream Cheese- Ben’s Cream Cheese (Eataly)

Pear and Raspbery Pie
Bartlett Pears- Breezy Hill Orchards
Raspberries- Berried Treasures

Buttermilk Ice Cream
Buttermilk- Tonje’s Family Dairy
Heavy Cream- Milk Thistle Organic Dairy
Eggs- Flying Pig Farm